Linked by Sean Oliviero on Wed 28th Jul 2004 05:54 UTC
The promise of Desktop Linux (DL) has been long coming. It's made significant progress since the mid-90s when GNOME and KDE came out, giving Linux users a somewhat modern desktop to work upon. However, it's been 7 years and DL hasn't progressed much at all since then. Today, DL is still nothing more than a UNIX-clone with a task bar, a start menu, and a desktop with some icons on it. But why has DL evolved at such a glacial pace?
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Please stop saying Linux isn't evolving so much.. As a KDE programmer I can tell you that this isn't true.
GCC, X.org, KDE, reiser4, QT4, the new kernel.. These only some of the great things that are in the "work in progress" list. The impact will be huge.
WAIT AND SEE...
Please stop saying Linux isn't evolving so much.. As a KDE programmer I can tell you that this isn't true.
GCC, X.org, KDE, reiser4, QT4, the new kernel.. These only some of the great things that are in the "work in progress" list. The impact will be huge.
WAIT AND SEE...